vlad 6f123ff03e 18.07 %!s(int64=6) %!d(string=hai) anos
..
.gitattributes 6f123ff03e 18.07 %!s(int64=6) %!d(string=hai) anos
.jshintrc 6f123ff03e 18.07 %!s(int64=6) %!d(string=hai) anos
.npmignore 6f123ff03e 18.07 %!s(int64=6) %!d(string=hai) anos
.travis.yml 6f123ff03e 18.07 %!s(int64=6) %!d(string=hai) anos
.verb.md 6f123ff03e 18.07 %!s(int64=6) %!d(string=hai) anos
LICENSE 6f123ff03e 18.07 %!s(int64=6) %!d(string=hai) anos
README.md 6f123ff03e 18.07 %!s(int64=6) %!d(string=hai) anos
index.js 6f123ff03e 18.07 %!s(int64=6) %!d(string=hai) anos
package.json 6f123ff03e 18.07 %!s(int64=6) %!d(string=hai) anos
test.js 6f123ff03e 18.07 %!s(int64=6) %!d(string=hai) anos

README.md

preserve NPM version

Temporarily substitute tokens in the given string with placeholders, then put them back after transforming the string.

Useful for protecting tokens, like templates in HTML, from being mutated when the string is transformed in some way, like from a formatter/beautifier.

Example without preserve

Let's say you want to use js-beautify on a string of html with Lo-Dash/Underscore templates, such as: <ul><li><%= name %></li></ul>:

js-beautify will render the template unusable (and apply incorrect formatting because of the unfamiliar syntax from the Lo-Dash template):

<ul>
  <li>
    <%=n ame %>
  </li>
</ul>

Example with preserve

Correct.

<ul>
  <li><%= name %></li>
</ul>

For the record, this is just a random example, I've had very few issues with js-beautify in general. But with or without js-beautify, this kind of token mangling does happen sometimes when you use formatters, beautifiers or similar tools.

Install

Install with npm

npm i preserve --save

Run tests

npm test

API

.before

Replace tokens in str with a temporary, heuristic placeholder.

  • str {String}
  • returns {String}: String with placeholders.
tokens.before('{a\\,b}');
//=> '{__ID1__}'

.after

Replace placeholders in str with original tokens.

  • str {String}: String with placeholders
  • returns {String} str: String with original tokens.
tokens.after('{__ID1__}');
//=> '{a\\,b}'

Contributing

Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, please create an issue

Author

Jon Schlinkert

License

Copyright (c) 2015-2015, Jon Schlinkert. Released under the MIT license


This file was generated by verb on January 10, 2015.